Provisional Application No. 62/761,372 filed Mar. 22, 2018 and Non-Provisional application Ser. No. 15/932,851.
Not applicable.
None.
Other items that could be used to accomplish the same thing are:
1. Elmlinger (U.S. Pat. No. 7,448,598) for lifting entire panels of walls from the ground into a standing position for installation;
2. Kuest (U.S. Pat. No. 3,871,477) which is a complex scaffold/lift combination that is a heavy tool requiring cranking to lift the material;
3. Raycraft (U.S. Publication 2005-0098769), which is similar to a ceiling mounted pulley system;
4. Ray (U.S. Publication 2002/0159863 A1) is a lifting platform that lifts multiple pieces of drywall, plywood or other materials using a pulley system to lift it up to the desired level where the material is being installed. Upper and lower clamps are used to clamp the platform to something (the publication is not clear on this). This appears to take some time to set up before using; and
5. Van Rockel (U.S. Pat. No. 8,287,221) that is a system for lifting entire walls that have been assembled horizontally on the ground and need to be lifted into a vertical position.
6. DSR Tool, patent application Ser. No. 15/932,851 is similar to the PB-DSR Tool except that it is designed to be used with the Safeway scaffolding, which has a round tubular frame.
Unlike the above patents, the PB-DSR Tool is a small, lightweight, portable tool that requires no set up, no assembly and no cranking or pulley to lift the materials. It is designed specifically for rolling heavy drywall, plywood and other materials from the ground up to a person on a scaffold instead of lifting it. You merely roll the material upward to a person on the scaffold.
This invention was created by a man who has worked in the construction industry his entire adult life and spent many hours lifting 4′×8′ or 4′×12′ sheets of drywall weighing approximately 100 pounds or more from the ground up onto a scaffold, either by himself and/or with the help of others. He came up with the idea for a roller to slide the drywall to help get the drywall up to the workers on the scaffold by rolling it on the drywall scaffold roller, reducing the damage to his body, including his arms, legs, back and feet. He and an employee used the prototype several times on jobs to roll drywall up onto the scaffold.
The PB-DSR tool is a lightweight tool weighing approximately two pounds that construction workers who hang drywall (or plywood) can use to roll the heavy material from the ground to the workers on a scaffold instead of lifting it by himself using his back, arms and legs, which causes injuries. The worker on the ground stands the drywall or other material on end, leans it against the roller, and rolls it upwards to the person on the scaffold instead of lifting the drywall up to the worker on the scaffold.
This lift roller fits the Perry and Baker scaffolding with the square tubular framing.
Drawings are attached that include specifications and views of the various parts of the drywall scaffold roller as follows:
The PB-DSR Tool is a tool that every person who hangs drywall for a living needs for moving drywall from the ground onto a scaffold above the ground for installation on walls. It is lightweight, weighing approximately two pounds, mobile with no assembly or set up required and no cranking to lift the heavy material. This lift roller fits the Perry and Baker scaffolding with the square frames.
The body of the frame (
A half inch (0.500) (
A half inch (0.500) washer (
A roller (
The 3/16″ washer (
The three inch round metal 14 gauge disc (
The metal cap (
To secure the PB DSR Tool to the frame, the loop end of lanyard in (8-C) is attached to the ring at the top of the quick release ring (8-B) and inserted from front to back through the two holes depicted on
Assembly procedure is shown on (
Assembled roller (
| Number | Name | Date | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3871477 | Kuest | Mar 1975 | A |
| 5984605 | Young | Nov 1999 | A |
| 7448598 | Elmlinger | Nov 2008 | B1 |
| 8287221 | Van Roekel | Oct 2012 | B1 |
| 9932744 | Vandenberg | Apr 2018 | B2 |
| 10590663 | Meeks | Mar 2020 | B1 |
| 20020159863 | Ray | Oct 2002 | A1 |
| 20050098769 | Raycraft | May 2005 | A1 |